A documentary film about the life and career of noted photographer, Walter Rosenblum, covering his work with the Photo League, described by The New York Times as suffused with formal beauty and expressive power and tenderness.

Surveys the contemporary Chicano art movement by tracing its development during the height of Chicano political activism in the late Sixties and Seventies, blending archival footage with interviews with the artists and samples of their work, including photographs, murals, graphics, films, paintings, and ephemeral art.

O. Winston Link (1914-2001) was America's greatest photographer of the romance of the steam engine, as documented in his book, Steam, Steel & Stars: America's Last Steam Railroad. His extraordinary images were made at night, using elaborate flash equipment, capturing trains in action on the Norfolk and Western, the last steam railroad line in the U.S., during the 1950s. This video takes a journey with Link, then in his latest Seventies, along the tracks of the N&W, through Virginia and West Virginia, as he recounts the experience of setting up and taking his remarkable photos.

When photographer Elaine Briere visited Portuguese East
Timor in 1974, she found a
highly developed, centuries-old culture with a refined
aesthetic and social sensibility. Her
photos would become the last record of a people about
to face virtual annihilation,
because, when Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975,
the world looked the other way.

This short drama portrays the efforts of a young woman photographer to uncover the
fragmentary and little-known history of an early nineteenth-century Puerto Rican
feminist and political activist who was deported for her nationalist beliefs by the Spanish
colonial government of the era.

Portrays the life of America's pioneer social photographer, Lewis Hine (1874-1940), who
recorded the waves of immigration around the turn of the century and the development of
industrial America during the first four decades of the 20th century, from the sweatshops
of New York's Lower East Side to the mines, mills and factories across the nation. The
video blends Hine's photos with historical footage and interviews.

Examines the history of photography in Brazil, dating from 1839, and simultaneously
traces the history of the development of Rio de Janeiro as one of the world's major cities
and a political and cultural center of Brazil. The video discusses the experiences of
photographers of the period, showing the evolution of photography as an art and a trade.

Profiles the life and work of Martin Chambi (1891-1973), a full-blooded Indian, who ran
his own photographic studio in Cuzco, Peru's ancient Inca capital, where he
photographed many of Peru's wealthy European families.

Examines the nature of photography and its powers of expression by combining photos
with commentary by photographers such as Marc Camille Chaimowicz and the late Jo
Spence and critics such as Halla Beloff (Camera Culture) and John Berger (Ways of
Seeing).

More than 100 years ago, in his journalism and his influential book, How the Other Half
Lives, photojournalist Jacob Riis dramatically portrayed issues of homelessness, poverty,
crime, public health, and race relations in America.

This video tells the story of John Hinde, a British photographer who pioneered in color
photography in the Thirties, emigrated to Ireland in the Fifties with a traveling circus and
later established one of the world's largest postcard empires.